Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

Orlando 'Tea Party' rally draws more than 4,000

<dl class="byline">By Helen Eckinger |Sentinel Staff Writer<dd> March 22, 2009</dd></dl>
Valerie Rike, 52, (left) with sister Christy Bishop, 59, attend the 'Orlando Tea Party,' a conservative rally Saturday at Lake Eola, downtown Orlando. (Helen Eckinger, Orlando Sentinel / March 21, 2009)


<!-- sphereit start --> Singer Lloyd Marcus told the crowd assembled in Lake Eola Park on Saturday that he was going to give them his take on the first days of the Obama administration.

Then he shrieked.

That pretty much summed up the mood in the park Saturday afternoon, when more than 4,000 people attended the Orlando Tea Party, a conservative rally aimed at expressing discontent with Washington.

"This is maybe the greatest single gathering of God-fearing patriots in the history of Orlando, Florida," local conservative radio host Bud Hedinger, who emceed the event, told the crowd.



<!-- END rail --> The attendees, many of whom said they'd heard about the rally on Hedinger's radio show, brandished flags and homemade signs bearing slogans such as "Repeal the pork or our bacon is cooked" and "Obama lied, liberty died."

"We're really scared about what's happening in our country," said Debby Whisenand, 71, of Largo in Pinellas County. She waved a sign that read "The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money" on one side, and "You can't blame Bush anymore" on the other.

Her feelings were shared by Lisa Feroli, one of the event's organizers, who said that a similar fear motivated her to e-mail Hedinger with the idea for the Orlando Tea Party.

"The goal was to get people united, to let people know that they aren't alone in their feelings on despair," Feroli said. "We want to speak out against the push toward socialization that we feel is taking place in our country."

Several speakers addressed the crowd, estimated by Orlando police and event organizers at 4,200, on a variety of topics, including gun rights, freedom of speech, the dangers of communism and, most prevalently, the economy, especially the Obama administration's bailout plan.

"We have had enough of massive government-driven bailout using our money," Hedinger said, prompting the crowd to start chanting "U.S.A." over and over.

The country's economic woes weighed heavily on attendees, such as Ed Squire, 52, of Winter Springs. Holding a sign that read "Obama ? he's robbin U.S. not Robin Hood," he said that he was worried about the current rate of government spending.

"There's absolutely no way as a nation that we can sustain that kind of spending," Squire said.

Several members of the crowd said they'd recently been laid off, including Ross Iannarelli, 66, of Port Orange, who said he'd just lost his job at an electrical-equipment company.

"They need to shove that bum out," he said, referring to President Obama. "I hate seeing them spend my grandchildren's money."

Glenn Austin, 52, and his wife, Frankie, 43, of Oviedo, also said they were anxious about the economy. They chose to express their worries, however, in a rather novel way: They wrapped banners calling for the end of the Federal Reserve around the tiny waists of their Chihuahua, Pepper, and miniature pinscher-Chihuahua mix, Peanut.

"Everything's gone to the dogs," Frankie Austin said.

Helen Eckinger can be reached at heckinger@orlandosentinel.com or 352-742-5934.
 

Doc Mercer

EOG Master
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

2 "sharp" looking individuals ....

is that Joey C on the left?
 

brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

<HR style="COLOR: #d1d1e1" SIZE=1><!-- / icon and title --><!-- message --><!-- message --><EMBED src=http://www.youtube.com/v/jeYscnFpEyA&hl=en&fs=1 width=480 height=295 type=application/x-shockwave-flash allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></EMBED>
 

Doc Mercer

EOG Master
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

Brucey:

keep listening to Beck ....

only a matter of time till ya take out a family of African Americans because
the "Rev Beck said those dark skinned folks threatened the Constitution .."
 

Doc Mercer

EOG Master
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

The "concerns" of Americans at this stage is comical at best
 

brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

I was a Witness to History.
Monday, July 6, 2009, 07:53 AM
Tea Party Fever: The Citizen Revolution Has Begun: 20,000 Strong in two Texas Cities on Independence Day

The Shameless Cover-Up by the Mainstream National Media

Weapons of Mass Distraction- Media Feeds the Public a Steady Diet of Michael Jackson

By Wayne Allyn Root, 2008 Libertarian Vice Presidential nominee


I saw it. I?m a witness to history. Someone has to provide witness to what our national mainstream media refuses to cover. The anger is rising. It is boiling over. The signs of the coming citizen revolution are everywhere. Just two days ago, on July 4th I spoke at Tea Party protests in Austin and Dallas. About 20,000 Americans citizens attended those two protests on a national holiday, in stifling 102 degree heat and unfathomable humidity. I know what normal people would have done on a typical national holiday on a stifling hot summer day at any other time in our nation?s history- go swimming with their family, or barbeque with family and friends in the shade. But these 20,000 people in two Texas cities sacrificed their valuable family time on a holiday to stand in the blistering heat and direct sunshine to vent their anger at the politicians (of both parties) who are destroying our country, killing capitalism, damaging the economy beyond repair, and enslaving our children and grandchildren to a lifetime of debt.

I assume tens of thousands turned out in other cities across the country. Hundreds of thousands in all. But I wouldn?t know. The news media didn?t report it.

While the media willfully ignores the Tea Party protests right in front of their eyes, they choose to talk nonstop about ?green shoots? in the economy that don?t exist. These ?green shoots? are a total fabrication- a figment of an ignorant, delusional, or deliberately fraudulent liberal media?s imagination. The economy is crumbling. The Obama debt is turning a deep recession into ?the Greater Depression.? The numbers get worse every day. We are on the verge of economic Armageddon. But the President, the politicians who enable him, and the mainstream media are afraid to present the truth to the public. Perhaps they believe, as Jack Nicholson said in the movie A Few Good Men, ?The truth? You can?t handle the truth.?

What California is now experiencing- debt, default, insolvency, bankruptcy, IOU?s to its own citizens- is coming to a country nearest you called America. California is merely ?the canary in the coal mine? of what irresponsible liberal fiscal policy is about to do to the entire USA. California is ground zero of economic Armageddon. California is the true sign of how deep the hole is. Yet Obama keeps digging.

The deficit is out of control. The debt is unsustainable. Small businesses close by the hundreds of thousands. Almost 500,000 Americans a month continue to lose their jobs. No more government employees can be hired or paid for. The Obama economic stimulus plan is in shambles. The game is up. Yet Obama wants desperately to add to the debt. He tries desperately to push through a new $1.6 trillion dollar Universal Healthcare bill that will cost more than all the personal income taxes paid in America. He tries desperately to push through a Cap and Trade bill that will double or triple our electric rates and put American business out of business- in the middle of a depression. He asks the Federal Reserve to print more money to pay for all his debt, bailouts, handouts, entitlements, union giveaways and redistribution schemes. It is all the definition of utter insanity.

Small business is the economic engine of our U.S. economy. Small business creates 75% of new jobs- yet small business is going out of business like never before. Every day more small businesses close by the thousands. The landlords that own the buildings and strip malls and shopping centers where those small businesses used to be located are in bankruptcy, or will be soon. A wave of commercial real estate foreclosures that has never been seen in U.S. history is on the way. A wave so crippling it will make the wave of home foreclosures we?ve just experienced look small. Banks will buckle under this coming commercial wave of debt. But this news the mainstream media refuses to report?or simply doesn?t even understand.

Worse, the upper middle class that owns those businesses and buildings and shopping malls, that pays virtually all of our taxes, is being driven out of existence. Whether Obama or his Kool Aid drinkers in the media realize it or not, his grand dreams are DOA (dead on arrival). The plan was to pay for it all by ?taxing the rich.? Well the rich that Obama hates so much, whose money he planned to redistribute, is vanishing by the day. There is no income left to redistribute. There is no one left to pay Obama?s tab. But this news the mainstream media refuses to report?or simply doesn?t even understand.

But none of this stops the biased liberal media from talking about ?green shoots? and the prospects of economic recovery right around the corner. However far worse than these false hopes of recovery are the outright deceptions and fraud of the media. Whenever 25 or 50 anti-war demonstrators gathered against the Iraq War during the Bush presidency, the media was there with dozens of cameramen and reporters to cover it in detail- and make it look like a citizen revolution. Yet today a true citizen revolution is brewing and the media refuses to cover it. The anger about the Iraq War was small and inconsequential compared to the anger in the streets from ordinary Americans today.

Today the proof that a true citizen revolution is brewing is evident at Tea Party rallies and protests across this great country. The protestors at these Tea Parties are not the typical socialist radicals, counter-culture hippies, and professional protestors of the left who attended the war rallies. The Tea Party protestors define middle America. These are small business owners, blue-collar workers, parents with young children in tow, grandparents, patriotic war veterans. These are people who have never said a bad word about America in their lives. These are flag wavers- not flag burners. These are lifelong Republicans and conservatives and libertarians who have never attended a protest in their lives.

These are patriots looking to save their country, not American-haters looking to tear it down. They used to be too busy running businesses and taking care of their families to protest. Now they are willing to protest, scream and rage at the politicians destroying he American Dream. This is the story of the decade- perhaps the century. This is the story that should be on the cover of Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report. This is the story that should lead off the national evening newscasts. Yet it is met with deafening silence. Instead we are fed a steady diet of Michael Jackson. Weapons of Mass Distraction.

Yet despite the media fraud and distractions, these quintessential middle American patriots are out in the streets protesting, screaming, raging. Angry. Bitter. Bursting at the seams in disgust and disillusionment. Not willing to take it anymore. Not words we?ve ever used to describe salt-of-the-earth middle American parents and grandparents. Something is happening. Something very unusual. Something very powerful. Perhaps for the first time ever, something out of the control of the mainstream national media (could that be what frightens them?). Something bigger than even the powerful politicians. Something bigger than all of us.

What I witnessed (as one of the main speakers at both events) in Texas on Independence Day was the Governor of Texas getting booed by his own conservative constituents. And the United States Senator of Texas getting literally booed and shouted off the stage by these same conservative constituents. These were Republican politicians. The protestors were taxpayers. Angry taxpayers. Angry that their money has been given away- looted- by politicians on both sides of the aisle. Angry about bailouts of wealthy corporations and CEO?s. Angry about wasted trillion dollar economic stimulus plans to nowhere. Angry about tax cuts given to people who never paid taxes in the first place. Angry about our government undertaking a hostile takeover of American business. Angry about government handing GM and Chrysler tens of billions of taxpayer dollars just so they could go bankrupt anyway, and then handing the leftover companies to the auto unions who weren?t even secured creditors. Angry about the socialization of America happening before our eyes.

20,000 people. In 102 degree heat and humidity. On a holiday. Not professional protestors, but taxpayers. Angry citizens. Parents. Grandparents. I was there to witness it. This is history in the making. The citizen revolution has begun. Whether the media notices?or cares?or understands?or not.

Wayne Allyn Root was the 2008 Libertarian Vice Presidential candidate
 

brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

CNBC's Santelli Rips Media for Ignoring 9/12 DC March

By Jeff Poor | September 14, 2009 - 15:13

<EMBED src=http://www.eyeblast.tv/public/eyeblast.swf?v=Gd8zqGytqG&c1=0xACACAC&c2=0x373737&sm=1 width=250 height=202 type=application/x-shockwave-flash allowfullscreen="true"></EMBED>
Not everyone at the NBC Universal umbrella of networks got the gag order memo about the Sept. 12 march on Washington, D.C.
Rick Santelli, who has been a target of the Obama White House and is credited with being the inspiration for the 2009 tea party movement, spoke out about how the media ignored the march. But, a year after the fall of Lehman Brothers, he was making the larger point that the government's intervention to thwart a financial crisis had been an ineffectual and potentially dangerous maneuver at the expense of taxpayers.
"I think this one-year anniversary is great, but I think it's great for another reason," Santelli said on CNBC's Sept. 14 "Squawk Box." "I think someday we'll learn that we didn't need to do very much, that time heals all wounds and you don't have to go broke in the process."
 

Spytheweb

EOG Addicted
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

Where were these people when Bush was robbing the country for 8 years?

No joke!
 

Spytheweb

EOG Addicted
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

I was a Witness to History.
Monday, July 6, 2009, 07:53 AM
Tea Party Fever: The Citizen Revolution Has Begun: 20,000 Strong in two Texas Cities on Independence Day

The Shameless Cover-Up by the Mainstream National Media

Weapons of Mass Distraction- Media Feeds the Public a Steady Diet of Michael Jackson

By Wayne Allyn Root, 2008 Libertarian Vice Presidential nominee


I saw it. I?m a witness to history. Someone has to provide witness to what our national mainstream media refuses to cover. The anger is rising. It is boiling over. The signs of the coming citizen revolution are everywhere. Just two days ago, on July 4th I spoke at Tea Party protests in Austin and Dallas. About 20,000 Americans citizens attended those two protests on a national holiday, in stifling 102 degree heat and unfathomable humidity. I know what normal people would have done on a typical national holiday on a stifling hot summer day at any other time in our nation?s history- go swimming with their family, or barbeque with family and friends in the shade. But these 20,000 people in two Texas cities sacrificed their valuable family time on a holiday to stand in the blistering heat and direct sunshine to vent their anger at the politicians (of both parties) who are destroying our country, killing capitalism, damaging the economy beyond repair, and enslaving our children and grandchildren to a lifetime of debt.

I assume tens of thousands turned out in other cities across the country. Hundreds of thousands in all. But I wouldn?t know. The news media didn?t report it.

While the media willfully ignores the Tea Party protests right in front of their eyes, they choose to talk nonstop about ?green shoots? in the economy that don?t exist. These ?green shoots? are a total fabrication- a figment of an ignorant, delusional, or deliberately fraudulent liberal media?s imagination. The economy is crumbling. The Obama debt is turning a deep recession into ?the Greater Depression.? The numbers get worse every day. We are on the verge of economic Armageddon. But the President, the politicians who enable him, and the mainstream media are afraid to present the truth to the public. Perhaps they believe, as Jack Nicholson said in the movie A Few Good Men, ?The truth? You can?t handle the truth.?

What California is now experiencing- debt, default, insolvency, bankruptcy, IOU?s to its own citizens- is coming to a country nearest you called America. California is merely ?the canary in the coal mine? of what irresponsible liberal fiscal policy is about to do to the entire USA. California is ground zero of economic Armageddon. California is the true sign of how deep the hole is. Yet Obama keeps digging.

The deficit is out of control. The debt is unsustainable. Small businesses close by the hundreds of thousands. Almost 500,000 Americans a month continue to lose their jobs. No more government employees can be hired or paid for. The Obama economic stimulus plan is in shambles. The game is up. Yet Obama wants desperately to add to the debt. He tries desperately to push through a new $1.6 trillion dollar Universal Healthcare bill that will cost more than all the personal income taxes paid in America. He tries desperately to push through a Cap and Trade bill that will double or triple our electric rates and put American business out of business- in the middle of a depression. He asks the Federal Reserve to print more money to pay for all his debt, bailouts, handouts, entitlements, union giveaways and redistribution schemes. It is all the definition of utter insanity.

Small business is the economic engine of our U.S. economy. Small business creates 75% of new jobs- yet small business is going out of business like never before. Every day more small businesses close by the thousands. The landlords that own the buildings and strip malls and shopping centers where those small businesses used to be located are in bankruptcy, or will be soon. A wave of commercial real estate foreclosures that has never been seen in U.S. history is on the way. A wave so crippling it will make the wave of home foreclosures we?ve just experienced look small. Banks will buckle under this coming commercial wave of debt. But this news the mainstream media refuses to report?or simply doesn?t even understand.

Worse, the upper middle class that owns those businesses and buildings and shopping malls, that pays virtually all of our taxes, is being driven out of existence. Whether Obama or his Kool Aid drinkers in the media realize it or not, his grand dreams are DOA (dead on arrival). The plan was to pay for it all by ?taxing the rich.? Well the rich that Obama hates so much, whose money he planned to redistribute, is vanishing by the day. There is no income left to redistribute. There is no one left to pay Obama?s tab. But this news the mainstream media refuses to report?or simply doesn?t even understand.

But none of this stops the biased liberal media from talking about ?green shoots? and the prospects of economic recovery right around the corner. However far worse than these false hopes of recovery are the outright deceptions and fraud of the media. Whenever 25 or 50 anti-war demonstrators gathered against the Iraq War during the Bush presidency, the media was there with dozens of cameramen and reporters to cover it in detail- and make it look like a citizen revolution. Yet today a true citizen revolution is brewing and the media refuses to cover it. The anger about the Iraq War was small and inconsequential compared to the anger in the streets from ordinary Americans today.

Today the proof that a true citizen revolution is brewing is evident at Tea Party rallies and protests across this great country. The protestors at these Tea Parties are not the typical socialist radicals, counter-culture hippies, and professional protestors of the left who attended the war rallies. The Tea Party protestors define middle America. These are small business owners, blue-collar workers, parents with young children in tow, grandparents, patriotic war veterans. These are people who have never said a bad word about America in their lives. These are flag wavers- not flag burners. These are lifelong Republicans and conservatives and libertarians who have never attended a protest in their lives.

These are patriots looking to save their country, not American-haters looking to tear it down. They used to be too busy running businesses and taking care of their families to protest. Now they are willing to protest, scream and rage at the politicians destroying he American Dream. This is the story of the decade- perhaps the century. This is the story that should be on the cover of Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report. This is the story that should lead off the national evening newscasts. Yet it is met with deafening silence. Instead we are fed a steady diet of Michael Jackson. Weapons of Mass Distraction.

Yet despite the media fraud and distractions, these quintessential middle American patriots are out in the streets protesting, screaming, raging. Angry. Bitter. Bursting at the seams in disgust and disillusionment. Not willing to take it anymore. Not words we?ve ever used to describe salt-of-the-earth middle American parents and grandparents. Something is happening. Something very unusual. Something very powerful. Perhaps for the first time ever, something out of the control of the mainstream national media (could that be what frightens them?). Something bigger than even the powerful politicians. Something bigger than all of us.

What I witnessed (as one of the main speakers at both events) in Texas on Independence Day was the Governor of Texas getting booed by his own conservative constituents. And the United States Senator of Texas getting literally booed and shouted off the stage by these same conservative constituents. These were Republican politicians. The protestors were taxpayers. Angry taxpayers. Angry that their money has been given away- looted- by politicians on both sides of the aisle. Angry about bailouts of wealthy corporations and CEO?s. Angry about wasted trillion dollar economic stimulus plans to nowhere. Angry about tax cuts given to people who never paid taxes in the first place. Angry about our government undertaking a hostile takeover of American business. Angry about government handing GM and Chrysler tens of billions of taxpayer dollars just so they could go bankrupt anyway, and then handing the leftover companies to the auto unions who weren?t even secured creditors. Angry about the socialization of America happening before our eyes.

20,000 people. In 102 degree heat and humidity. On a holiday. Not professional protestors, but taxpayers. Angry citizens. Parents. Grandparents. I was there to witness it. This is history in the making. The citizen revolution has begun. Whether the media notices?or cares?or understands?or not.

Wayne Allyn Root was the 2008 Libertarian Vice Presidential candidate

Texas the most uninsured state in America at 25-30%. Texas, losing health insurance coverage at the rate of 24,000 a month, what's their plan? They don't know but they don't want a black President coming up with one for them.
 

scrimmage

What you contemplate you imitate
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.


Subverted Tea Party Movement Told to Embrace Republican Platform

By Kurt Nimmo
Prison Planet.com
Friday, February 5, 2010
Excerpts from:
http://www.prisonplanet.com/subverted-tea-party-movement-told-to-embrace-republican-platform.html

The Tea Party movement is now almost completely unrecognizable from what it was a few short years ago. It came to prominence in 2008 when the Libertarian Party of Illinois planned to hold an April 15, 2009 anti-tax ?Boston Tea Party? in Chicago. In February 2009, the idea grew after CNBC personality Rick Santelli, speaking from the floor of the Chicago stock exchange, criticized the Obama administration?s tax and economic policies and urged Americans become Tea Party activists.

It didn?t take long for establishment Republicans to steal the idea and claim it as their own. A few weeks after Rick Santelli made his comments, Ron Paul?s media coordinator Steve Gordon went on MSNBC?s Rachel Maddow show and complained about what he characterized as an attempt by Republicans to hijack the idea. Gordon specifically blamed former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee.

It didn?t take long for Republicans to embrace the idea. RNC Chairman Michael Steele, Sarah Palin, and Rep. Michele Bachmann from Minnesota have suggested the Tea Party should be rolled into the Republican Borg hive.

Now there will be a national Tea Party convention in Nashville. It will be a parade of Republican statists with former Alaskan governor Sarah Palin leading the charge. ?I look forward to meeting many Americans who share a commitment to limited government, common sense and personal responsibility. This movement is truly a grassroots, organic effort. It?s not a top-down organization,?Palin wrote for USA Today, ?it?s a ground-up call to action that already has both political parties rethinking the way they do business.?

Ground-up? Tea Party candidates for the 2010 mid-term elections ?will be expected to support the Republican National Committee platform,? according to Fox News. ?If a particular candidate meets the proposed Tea Party criteria he or she would be eligible for fundraising and grassroots Tea Party support.?

?Once elected to office, members would be required to join a Congressional Tea Party Caucus, attend regular meetings and be held accountable for the votes they cast. Those who stray from the Tea Party path would risk losing it?s support and a likely re-election challenge.?

In other words, business as usual...

If the co-opted Tea Party embraces the Republican National Committee platform, it will finalize its mutation from a grassroots libertarian organization into an establishment statist tool pushing a national debt for the banksters, bloated government, taxation, perpetual war, and continued attacks on the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

It should be obvious by now that the Republicans plan to run Sarah Palin against Obama in 2012. This will be a disaster for the Republicans because many Americans are not fooled by her sudden Tea Party plumage. Republicans are desperate to regain control of the White House and Congress and give us four or eight more years of Bush and his warmongering statist neocons. It is a shabby and absurdly transparent gimmick.

Real Tea Party activists and supporters need to reject Palin, Huckabee, Gingrich, and the Republicans out of hand. They should be vocal about their rejection. Otherwise we will end up with another ideologue and teleprompter reading cigar store Indian for the ruling elite.
 

tank

EOG Dedicated
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

These fools have no idea where the money is coming from.From the get go the GOP has taken this over and now they are setting the agenda.It went from grassroots to corporate owned in weeks.
 

scrimmage

What you contemplate you imitate
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

Behind the Tea Party Facade,
Just Another Bush-League Republican

Posted on Feb 24, 2010
By Yasha Levine and Mark Ames

The Tea Party Revolution has struck the Texas gubernatorial race, with the insurgent Republican candidate, Debra Medina, gaining in the polls and threatening the leading candidates, incumbent Gov. Rick Perry and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. Medina has positioned herself as a radical anti-government outsider who would cut Texas free from federal government programs and influence in favor of the free market. However, according to an investigation of Medina?s business records, her company, Prudentia Inc., benefited greatly over the past decade from federal government subsidies and lucrative municipal government contracts.

<TABLE style="BORDER-BOTTOM: #555555 0px solid; BORDER-LEFT: #555555 0px solid; FLOAT: right; MARGIN-LEFT: 10px; BORDER-TOP: #555555 0px solid; BORDER-RIGHT: #555555 0px solid" width=300><TBODY><TR><TD style="FONT-SIZE: x-small" align=right jQuery1267239254125="404"> </TD></TR><TR><TD style="FONT-SIZE: x-small" align=right jQuery1267239254125="405">AP / Pat Sullivan</TD></TR><TR><TD style="FONT-SIZE: x-small" jQuery1267239254125="406">Texas Republican gubernatorial candidate Debra Medina isn?t likely to win her party?s nomination, but the tea party candidate, who came out of nowhere, has done surprisingly well.





</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
Our investigation shows that when you scratch the surface of Texas? rising tea party star, you?ll find just another Bush-Republican, big-government hypocrite.

On Tuesday [March 2,2010], Texas will hold a gubernatorial primary election that has come down to a three-way fight for the GOP nomination.
Surprisingly, Medina, a rookie Republican candidate from the tiny rural town of Wharton who has positioned herself as the tea party alternative, is soaring beyond expectation. She has become a national celebrity, suddenly posing a threat to Gov. Perry and Sen. Hutchison. A tougher, rougher, stockier version of Sarah Palin, Medina surged in the polls after she slammed her mainstream Republican opponents in a televised debate, accusing both Perry and Hutchison of succumbing to ?big-government solutions? and selling out their Republican ideals. But for all her derision, Medina has been milking taxpayers for years, including those in her own community who subsidize her business.

Medina, a 44-year-old registered nurse who presents herself as the proud owner of a small medical billing business, offered a small-government platform based on God and the free market. She would scrap Texas? property taxes, criminalize abortions, expand home-schooling, eliminate guns laws and shrink government to the size of a walnut.

?If we get government off the backs of Texans, we?re not gonna have an economic crisis. We?re not gonna have an energy crisis. We?re not gonna have an immigration crisis,? she yelled to an audience of ?Don?t Tread on Me? types during a stump speech at a Chevrolet dealership.

The crowd went wild for Medina. She had all the right credentials: ran a small business, grew up on a farm in rural Texas, paid her dues as Texas coordinator for Ron Paul?s 2008 presidential campaign, home-schooled her children, didn?t trust flu vaccines and always carried a loaded Springfield 9-millimeter in her purse?and made sure she was photographed doing it. But the biggest villain of all in Medina?s rhetoric is the United States federal government. In the Republican primary debate in January, Medina said that the federal government?s powers should be stripped down to nothing more than making treaties with other countries. She also has said that as governor of Texas she would make sure that her state?s laws overruled the federal government?s?under what?s called ?nullification??and that she would do her best to stop just short of full secession from the Union.

Tea-baggers are slurping it up, but they probably aren?t aware exactly what it is they?re slurping. Despite her impassioned rhetoric and principled anti-federal government stands, Debra Medina hasn?t stuck by her principles. What she hasn?t told her libertarian supporters is that her business success over the past decade has depended on the government subsidies and contracts that she denounces. The tea party candidate is the same sort of hypocrite as her Republican foes: preaching free-market ideals to the masses while profiting off taxpayer money.

From and continued at:
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item...just_another_bush-league_republican_20100224/
 

Coulter

EOG Member
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

What cracks me up is that in the 6 months since the last time I visited these forums the same people are coping and pasting the same articles from the same sites. What I truly do not understand is this... Where was this outrage when the deficit tripled under Reagon and Doubled under Bush. There are legitimate arguments about spending and how to get out of this mess that Bush got us into. Let us not forget that it is the Republicans that led us down this rabbit hole. But to copy and past somebody elses work is lazy and unintelligent.

So cut and paste so more...
 

guitarjosh

EOG Addicted
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

What cracks me up is that in the 6 months since the last time I visited these forums the same people are coping and pasting the same articles from the same sites. What I truly do not understand is this... Where was this outrage when the deficit tripled under Reagon and Doubled under Bush. There are legitimate arguments about spending and how to get out of this mess that Bush got us into. Let us not forget that it is the Republicans that led us down this rabbit hole. But to copy and past somebody elses work is lazy and unintelligent.

So cut and paste so more...
I can tell you where they were on election nights of 2006 & 2008: home.
 
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

What cracks me up is that in the 6 months since the last time I visited these forums the same people are coping and pasting the same articles from the same sites. What I truly do not understand is this... Where was this outrage when the deficit tripled under Reagon and Doubled under Bush. There are legitimate arguments about spending and how to get out of this mess that Bush got us into. Let us not forget that it is the Republicans that led us down this rabbit hole. But to copy and past somebody elses work is lazy and unintelligent.

So cut and paste so more...
You are correct in that the right-wing posters are very hypocritcal in their opposition to Obama policies when the similar Bush policies were just as bad, if not worse. They were all silent if not constantly praising Bush.

Still, Obama cannot be off the hook just because Bush was the one who caused the problems. Obama has done nothing but continue the failed Bush policies of wasteful military spending in Iraq and elsewhere, trillions wasted in corporate bailouts, lack of economic regulation, promotion of outsourcing and illegal immigration, and more. 2938u4ji23
 

Coulter

EOG Member
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

You are correct in that the right-wing posters are very hypocritcal in their opposition to Obama policies when the similar Bush policies were just as bad, if not worse. They were all silent if not constantly praising Bush.

Still, Obama cannot be off the hook just because Bush was the one who caused the problems. Obama has done nothing but continue the failed Bush policies of wasteful military spending in Iraq and elsewhere, trillions wasted in corporate bailouts, lack of economic regulation, promotion of outsourcing and illegal immigration, and more. 2938u4ji23

You are absolutely correct in that many here a very hypocritical in there views on this board. That is why I laugh my butt off on these boards because Obama's policies have been very similar to Bush but because Obama has Democrat behind his name he is bashed.

I am certainly not letting Obama off the hook. I wish he would have done more on health care and fought harder earlier on and got this passed months ago. This has dragged on for way to long. Unfortunately, the health care plan that Obama has proposed is a good start but it is not as sweeping as I would like to see.

I suppose it is a sports betting forum so I am not really that surprised. :+textinb3
 
Re: Tea Party - We should start to see more of this.

If they truly supported ALL of the Constitution--and not just the parts they happen to "agree" with--I would be wearing a three-corner hat. Some interesting stuff here. I detect a remarkable lack of command of actual "facts" by some of the Teabaggers. . .I've taken the liberty of highlighting portions of the story that raise questions in my mind. . .
____________________________________________

<nyt_headline version="1.0" type=" "> Tea Party Lights Fuse for Rebellion on Right </nyt_headline>

Amanda Lucidon for The New York Times
A Tea Party rally in Washington in September.





<nyt_byline version="1.0" type=" "> By DAVID BARSTOW
</nyt_byline> Published: February 15, 2010
<!--NYT_INLINE_IMAGE_POSITION1 --> SANDPOINT, Idaho ? Pam Stout has not always lived in fear of her government. She remembers her years working in federal housing programs, watching government lift struggling families with job training and education. She beams at the memory of helping a Vietnamese woman get into junior college.





javascript:pop_me_up2('http://www.n...45,scrollbars=yes,toolbars=no,resizable=yes')




But all that was before the Great Recession and the bank bailouts, before Barack Obama took the White House by promising sweeping change on multiple fronts, before her son lost his job and his house. Mrs. Stout said she awoke to see Washington as a threat, a place where crisis is manipulated ? even manufactured ? by both parties to grab power.
She was happily retired, and had never been active politically. But last April, she went to her first Tea Party rally, then to a meeting of the Sandpoint Tea Party Patriots. She did not know a soul, yet when they began electing board members, she stood up, swallowed hard, and nominated herself for president. ?I was like, ?Did I really just do that?? ? she recalled.
Then she went even further.
Worried about hyperinflation, social unrest or even martial law, she and her Tea Party members joined a coalition, Friends for Liberty, that includes representatives from Glenn Beck?s 9/12 Project, the John Birch Society, and Oath Keepers, a new player in a resurgent militia movement.
When Friends for Liberty held its first public event, Mrs. Stout listened as Richard Mack, a former Arizona sheriff, brought 1,400 people to their feet with a speech about confronting a despotic federal government. Mrs. Stout said she felt as if she had been handed a road map to rebellion. Members of her family, she said, think she has disappeared down a rabbit hole of conspiracy theories. But Mrs. Stout said she has never felt so engaged.
?I can?t go on being the shy, quiet me,? she said. ?I need to stand up.?
The Tea Party movement has become a platform for conservative populist discontent, a force in Republican politics for revival, as it was in the Massachusetts Senate election, or for division. But it is also about the profound private transformation of people like Mrs. Stout, people who not long ago were not especially interested in politics, yet now say they are bracing for tyranny.
These people are part of a significant undercurrent within the Tea Party movement that has less in common with the Republican Party than with the Patriot movement, a brand of politics historically associated with libertarians, militia groups, anti-immigration advocates and those who argue for the abolition of the Federal Reserve.
Urged on by conservative commentators, waves of newly minted activists are turning to once-obscure books and Web sites and discovering a set of ideas long dismissed as the preserve of conspiracy theorists, interviews conducted across the country over several months show. In this view, Mr. Obama and many of his predecessors (including George W. Bush) have deliberately undermined the Constitution and free enterprise for the benefit of a shadowy international network of wealthy elites.
Loose alliances like Friends for Liberty are popping up in many cities, forming hybrid entities of Tea Parties and groups rooted in the Patriot ethos. These coalitions are not content with simply making the Republican Party more conservative. They have a larger goal ? a political reordering that would drastically shrink the federal government and sweep away not just Mr. Obama, but much of the Republican establishment, starting with Senator John McCain.
In many regions, including here in the inland Northwest, tense struggles have erupted over whether the Republican apparatus will co-opt these new coalitions or vice versa. Tea Party supporters are already singling out Republican candidates who they claim have ?aided and abetted? what they call the slide to tyranny: Mark Steven Kirk, a candidate for the Senate from Illinois, for supporting global warming legislation; Gov. Charlie Crist of Florida, who is seeking a Senate seat, for supporting stimulus spending; and Meg Whitman, a candidate for governor in California, for saying she was a ?big fan? of Van Jones, once Mr. Obama?s ?green jobs czar.?
During a recent meeting with Congressional Republicans, Mr. Obama acknowledged the potency of these attacks when he complained that depicting him as a would-be despot was complicating efforts to find bipartisan solutions.
?The fact of the matter is that many of you, if you voted with the administration on something, are politically vulnerable in your own base, in your own party,? Mr. Obama said. ?You?ve given yourselves very little room to work in a bipartisan fashion because what you?ve been telling your constituents is, ?This guy?s doing all kinds of crazy stuff that is going to destroy America.? ?
The ebbs and flows of the Tea Party ferment are hardly uniform. It is an amorphous, factionalized uprising with no clear leadership and no centralized structure. Not everyone flocking to the Tea Party movement is worried about dictatorship. Some have a basic aversion to big government, or Mr. Obama, or progressives in general. What?s more, some Tea Party groups are essentially appendages of the local Republican Party.
But most are not. They are frequently led by political neophytes who prize independence and tell strikingly similar stories of having been awakened by the recession. Their families upended by lost jobs, foreclosed homes and depleted retirement funds, they said they wanted to know why it happened and whom to blame.
That is often the point when Tea Party supporters say they began listening to Glenn Beck. With his guidance, they explored the Federalist Papers, expos?s on the Federal Reserve, the work of Ayn Rand and George Orwell. Some went to constitutional seminars. Online, they discovered radical critiques of Washington on Web sites like ResistNet.com (?Home of the Patriotic Resistance?) and Infowars.com (?Because there is a war on for your mind.?).
Many describe emerging from their research as if reborn to a new reality. Some have gone so far as to stock up on ammunition, gold and survival food in anticipation of the worst. For others, though, transformation seems to amount to trying on a new ideological outfit ? embracing the rhetoric and buying the books.
Tea Party leaders say they know their complaints about shredded constitutional principles and excessive spending ring hollow to some, given their relative passivity through the Bush years. In some ways, though, their main answer ? strict adherence to the Constitution ? would comfort every card-carrying A.C.L.U. member.
But their vision of the federal government is frequently at odds with the one that both parties have constructed. Tea Party gatherings are full of people who say they would do away with the Federal Reserve, the federal income tax and countless agencies, not to mention bailouts and stimulus packages. Nor is it unusual to hear calls to eliminate Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. A remarkable number say this despite having recently lost jobs or health coverage. Some of the prescriptions they are debating ? secession, tax boycotts, states ?nullifying? federal laws, forming citizen militias ? are outside the mainstream, too.
At a recent meeting of the Sandpoint Tea Party, Mrs. Stout presided with brisk efficiency until a member interrupted with urgent news. Because of the stimulus bill, he insisted, private medical records were being shipped to federal bureaucrats. A woman said her doctor had told her the same thing. There were gasps of rage. Everyone already viewed health reform as a ruse to control their medical choices and drive them into the grip of insurance conglomerates. Debate erupted. Could state medical authorities intervene? Should they call Congress?
As the meeting ended, Carolyn L. Whaley, 76, held up her copy of the Constitution. She carries it everywhere, she explained, and she was prepared to lay down her life to protect it from the likes of Mr. Obama.
?I would not hesitate,? she said, perfectly calm.
A Sprawling Rebellion
The Tea Party movement defies easy definition, largely because there is no single Tea Party.
At the grass-roots level, it consists of hundreds of autonomous Tea Party groups, widely varying in size and priorities, each influenced by the peculiarities of local history.
In the inland Northwest, the Tea Party movement has been shaped by the growing popularity in eastern Washington of Ron Paul, the libertarian congressman from Texas, and by a legacy of anti-government activism in northern Idaho. Outside Sandpoint, federal agents laid siege to Randy Weaver?s compound on Ruby Ridge in 1992, resulting in the deaths of a marshal and Mr. Weaver?s wife and son. To the south, Richard Butler, leader of the Aryan Nations, preached white separatism from a compound near Coeur d?Alene until he was shut down.
Local Tea Party groups are often loosely affiliated with one of several competing national Tea Party organizations. In the background, offering advice and organizational muscle, are an array of conservative lobbying groups, most notably FreedomWorks. Further complicating matters, Tea Party events have become a magnet for other groups and causes ? including gun rights activists, anti-tax crusaders, libertarians, militia organizers, the ?birthers? who doubt President Obama?s citizenship, Lyndon LaRouche supporters and proponents of the sovereign states movement.
It is a sprawling rebellion, but running through it is a narrative of impending tyranny. This narrative permeates Tea Party Web sites, Facebook pages, Twitter feeds and YouTube videos. It is a prominent theme of their favored media outlets and commentators, and it connects the disparate issues that preoccupy many Tea Party supporters ? from the concern that the community organization Acorn is stealing elections to the belief that Mr. Obama is trying to control the Internet and restrict gun ownership.
WorldNetDaily.com trumpets ?exclusives? reporting that the Army is seeking ?Internment/Resettlement? specialists. On ResistNet.com, bloggers warn that Mr. Obama is trying to convert Interpol, the international police organization, into his personal police force. They call on ?fellow Patriots? to ?grab their guns.?
Mr. Beck frequently echoes Patriot rhetoric, discussing the possible arrival of a ?New World Order? and arguing that Mr. Obama is using a strategy of manufactured crisis to destroy the economy and pave the way for dictatorship.
At recent Tea Party events around the country, these concerns surfaced repeatedly.
In New Mexico, Mary Johnson, recording secretary of the Las Cruces Tea Party steering committee, described why she fears the government. She pointed out how much easier it is since Sept. 11 for the government to tap telephones and scour e-mail, bank accounts and library records. ?Twenty years ago that would have been a paranoid statement,? Ms. Johnson said. ?It?s not anymore.?
In Texas, Toby Marie Walker, president of the Waco Tea Party, stood on a stage before several thousand people, ticking off the institutions she no longer trusts ? the federal government, both the major political parties, Wall Street. ?Many of us don?t believe they have our best interests at heart,? Ms. Walker said. She choked back tears, but the crowd urged her on with shouts of ?Go, Toby!?
As it happened in the inland Northwest with Friends for Liberty, the fear of Washington and the disgust for both parties is producing new coalitions of Tea Party supporters and groups affiliated with the Patriot movement. In Indiana, for example, a group called the Defenders of Liberty is helping organize ?meet-ups? with Tea Party groups and more than 50 Patriot organizations. The Ohio Freedom Alliance, meanwhile, is bringing together Tea Party supporters, Ohio sovereignty advocates and members of the Constitution and Libertarian Parties. The alliance is also helping to organize five ?liberty conferences? in March, each featuring Richard Mack, the same speaker invited to address Friends for Liberty.
Politicians courting the Tea Party movement are also alluding to Patriot dogma. At a Tea Party protest in Las Vegas, Joe Heck, a Republican running for Congress, blamed both the Democratic and Republican Parties for moving the country toward ?socialistic tyranny.? In Texas, Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican seeking re-election, threw his support behind the state sovereignty movement. And in Indiana, Richard Behney, a Republican Senate candidate, told Tea Party supporters what he would do if the 2010 elections did not produce results to his liking: ?I?m cleaning my guns and getting ready for the big show. And I?m serious about that, and I bet you are, too.?
Turning Points
Fear of co-option ? a perpetual topic in the Tea Party movement ? lay behind the formation of Friends for Liberty.
The new grass-roots leaders of the inland Northwest had grown weary of fending off what they jokingly called ?hijack attempts? by the state and county Republican Parties. Whether the issue was picking speakers or scheduling events, they suspected party leaders of trying to choke off their revolution with Chamber of Commerce incrementalism.
?We had to stand our ground, I?ll be blunt,? said Dann Selle, president of the Official Tea Party of Spokane.
In October, Mr. Selle, Mrs. Stout and about 20 others from across the region met in Liberty Lake, Wash., a small town on the Idaho border, to discuss how to achieve broad political change without sacrificing independence. The local Republican Party was excluded.
Most of the people there had paid only passing attention to national politics in years past. ?I voted twice and I failed political science twice,? said Darin Stevens, leader of the Spokane 9/12 Project.
Until the recession, Mr. Stevens, 33, had poured his energies into his family and his business installing wireless networks. He had to lay off employees, and he struggled to pay credit cards, a home equity loan, even his taxes. ?It hits you physically when you start getting the calls,? he said.
He discovered Glenn Beck, and began to think of Washington as a conspiracy to fleece the little guy. ?I had no clue that my country was being taken from me,? Mr. Stevens explained. He could not understand why his progressive friends did not see what he saw.
He felt compelled to do something, so he decided to start a chapter of Mr. Beck?s 9/12 Project. He reserved a room at a pizza parlor for a Glenn Beck viewing party and posted the event on Craigslist. ?We had 110 people there,? Mr. Stevens said. He recalled looking around the room and thinking, ?All these people ? they agree with me.?
Leah Southwell?s turning point came when she stumbled on Mr. Paul?s speeches on YouTube. (?He blew me away.?) Until recently, Mrs. Southwell was in the top 1 percent of all Mary Kay sales representatives, with a company car and a frenetic corporate life. ?I knew zero about the Constitution,? Mrs. Southwell confessed. Today, when asked about her commitment to the uprising, she recites a line from the Declaration of Independence, a Tea Party favorite: ?We mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.?
Mr. Paul led Mrs. Southwell to Patriot ideology, which holds that governments and economies are controlled by networks of elites who wield power through exclusive entities like the Bilderberg Group, the Trilateral Commission and the Council on Foreign Relations.
This idea has a long history, with variations found at both ends of the political spectrum. But to Mrs. Southwell, the government?s culpability for the recession ? the serial failures of regulation, the Federal Reserve?s epic blunders, the cozy bailouts for big banks ? made it resonate all the more, especially as she witnessed the impact on family and friends.
?The more you know, the madder you are,? she said. ?I mean when you finally learn what the Federal Reserve is!?
Last spring, Mrs. Southwell quit her job and became a national development officer for the John Birch Society, recruiting and raising money across the West, often at Tea Party events. She has been stunned by the number of Tea Party supporters gravitating toward Patriot ideology. ?Most of these people are just waking up,? she said.
Converging Paths
At Liberty Lake, the participants settled on a ?big tent? strategy, with each group supporting the others in the coalition they called Friends for Liberty.
One local group represented at Liberty Lake was Arm in Arm, which aims to organize neighborhoods for possible civil strife by stockpiling food and survival gear, and forming armed neighborhood groups.
Also represented was Oath Keepers, whose members call themselves ?guardians of the Republic.? Oath Keepers recruits military and law enforcement officials who are asked to disobey orders the group deems unconstitutional. These include orders to conduct warrantless searches, arrest Americans as unlawful enemy combatants or force civilians into ?any form of detention camps.?
Oath Keepers, which has been recruiting at Tea Party events around the country and forging informal ties with militia groups, has an enthusiastic following in Friends for Liberty. ?A lot of my people are Oath Keepers,? Mr. Stevens said. ?I?m an honorary Oath Keeper myself.?
Mrs. Stout became an honorary Oath Keeper, too, and sent an e-mail message urging her members to sign up. ?They may be very important for our future,? she wrote.
By inviting Richard Mack to speak at their first event, leaders of Friends for Liberty were trying to attract militia support. They knew Mr. Mack had many militia fans, and not simply because he had helped Randy Weaver write a book about Ruby Ridge. As a sheriff in Arizona, Mr. Mack had sued the Clinton administration over the Brady gun control law, which resulted in a Supreme Court ruling that the law violated state sovereignty by requiring local officials to conduct background checks on gun buyers.
Mr. Mack was selling Cadillacs in Arizona, his political career seemingly over, when Mr. Obama was elected. Disheartened by the results, he wrote a 50-page booklet branding the federal government ?the greatest threat we face.? The booklet argued that only local sheriffs supported by citizen militias could save the nation from ?utter despotism.? He titled his booklet ?The County Sheriff: America?s Last Hope,? offered it for sale on his Web site and returned to selling cars.
But last February he was invited to appear on ?Infowars,? the Internet radio program hosted by Alex Jones, a well-known figure in the Patriot movement. Then Mr. Mack went on ?The Power Hour,? another Internet radio program popular in the Patriot movement.
After those appearances, Mr. Mack said, he was inundated with invitations to speak to Tea Parties and Patriot groups. Demand was so great, he said, that he quit selling cars. Then Andrew P. Napolitano, a Fox News legal analyst, invited him to New York to appear on his podcast.
?It?s taken over my life,? Mr. Mack said in an interview.
He said he has found audiences everywhere struggling to make sense of why they were wiped out last year. These audiences, he said, are far more receptive to critiques once dismissed as paranoia. It is no longer considered all that radical, he said, to portray the Federal Reserve as a plaything of the big banks ? a point the Birch Society, among others, has argued for decades.
People are more willing, he said, to imagine a government that would lock up political opponents, or ration health care with ?death panels,? or fake global warming. And if global warming is a fraud, is it so crazy to wonder about a president?s birth certificate?
?People just do not trust any of this,? Mr. Mack said. ?It?s not just the fringe people anymore. These are just ordinary people ? teachers, bankers, housewives.?
The dog track opened at 5:45 p.m. for Mr. Mack?s speech, and the parking lot quickly filled. Inside, each Friends for Liberty sponsor had its own recruiting table. Several sheriffs and state legislators worked the crowd. ?I came out to talk with folks and listen to Sheriff Mack,? Ozzie Knezovich, the sheriff of Spokane County, Wash., explained.
Gazing out at his overwhelmingly white audience, Mr. Mack felt the need to say, ?This meeting is not racist.? Nor, he said, was it a call to insurrection. What is needed, he said, is ?a whole army of sheriffs? marching on Washington to deliver an unambiguous warning: ?Any violation of the Constitution we will consider a criminal offense.?
The crowd roared.
Mr. Mack shared his vision of the ideal sheriff. The setting was Montgomery, Ala., on the day Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat for a white passenger. Imagine the local sheriff, he said, rather than arresting Ms. Parks, escorting her home, stopping to buy her a meal at an all-white diner.
?Edmund Burke said the essence of tyranny is the enforcement of stupid laws,? he said. Likewise, Mr. Mack argued, sheriffs should have ignored ?stupid laws? and protected the Branch Davidians at Waco, Tex., and the Weaver family at Ruby Ridge.
Legacy
A popular T-shirt at Tea Party rallies reads, ?Proud Right-Wing Extremist.?
It is a defiant and mocking rejoinder to last April?s intelligence assessment from the Department of Homeland Security warning that recession and the election of the nation?s first black president ?present unique drivers for right wing radicalization.?
?Historically,? the assessment said, ?domestic right wing extremists have feared, predicted and anticipated a cataclysmic economic collapse in the United States.? Those predictions, it noted, are typically rooted in ?antigovernment conspiracy theories? featuring impending martial law. The assessment said extremist groups were already preparing for this scenario by stockpiling weapons and food and by resuming paramilitary exercises.
The report does not mention the Tea Party movement, but among Tea Party activists it is viewed with open scorn, evidence of a larger campaign by liberals to marginalize them as ?racist wingnuts.?
But Tony Stewart, a leading civil rights activist in the inland Northwest, took careful note of the report. Almost 30 years ago, Mr. Stewart cofounded the Kootenai County Task Force on Human Relations in Coeur d?Alene. The task force has campaigned relentlessly to rid north Idaho of its reputation as a haven for anti-government extremists. The task force tactics brought many successes, including a $6.3 million civil judgment that effectively bankrupted Richard Butler?s Aryan Nations.
When the Tea Party uprising gathered force last spring, Mr. Stewart saw painfully familiar cultural and rhetorical overtones. Mr. Stewart viewed the questions about Mr. Obama?s birthplace as a proxy for racism, and he was bothered by the ?common message of intolerance for the opposition.?
?It?s either you?re with us or you?re the enemy,? he said.
Mr. Stewart heard similar concerns from other civil rights activists around the country. They could not help but wonder why the explosion of conservative anger coincided with a series of violent acts by right wing extremists. In the Inland Northwest there had been a puzzling return of racist rhetoric and violence.
Mr. Stewart said it would be unfair to attribute any of these incidents to the Tea Party movement. ?We don?t have any evidence they are connected,? he said.
Still, he sees troubling parallels. Branding Mr. Obama a tyrant, Mr. Stewart said, constructs a logic that could be used to rationalize violence. ?When people start wearing guns to rallies, what?s the next thing that happens?? Mr. Stewart asked.
Rachel Dolezal, curator of the Human Rights Education Institute in Coeur d?Alene, has also watched the Tea Party movement with trepidation. Though raised in a conservative family, Ms. Dolezal, who is multiracial, said she could not imagine showing her face at a Tea Party event. To her, what stands out are the all-white crowds, the crude depictions of Mr. Obama as an African witch doctor and the signs labeling him a terrorist. ?It would make me nervous to be there unless I went with a big group,? she said.
The Future
Pam Stout wakes each morning, turns on Fox News, (how did we know??) grabs coffee and an Atkins bar, and hits the computer. She is the hub of a rapidly expanding and highly viral political network, keeping a running correspondence with her 400 members in Sandpoint, state and national Tea Party leaders and other conservative activists.
Mrs. Stout forwards along petitions to impeach Mr. Obama; petitions to audit the Federal Reserve; petitions to support Sarah Palin; appeals urging defiance of any federal law requiring health insurance; and on and on.
Meanwhile, she and her husband are studying the Constitution line by line. She has the Congressional switchboard programmed into her cellphone. ?I just signed up for a Twitter class,? said Mrs. Stout, 66, laughing at the improbability of it all.
Yet for all her efforts, Mrs. Stout is gripped by a sense that it may be too little too late. Yes, there have been victories ? including polls showing support for the Tea Party movement ? but in her view none of it has diminished the fundamental threat of tyranny, a point underscored by Mr. Obama?s drive to pass a health care overhaul.
She and her members are becoming convinced that rallies alone will not save the Republic. They are searching for some larger answer, she said. They are also waiting for a leader, someone capable of uniting their rebellion, someone like Ms. Palin, who made Sandpoint one of the final stops on her book tour and who has announced plans to attend a series of high-profile Tea Party events in the next few months.
?We need to really decide where we?re going to go,? Mrs. Stout said.
These questions of strategy, direction and leadership were clearly on the minds of Mrs. Stout?s members at a recent monthly meeting.
Their task seemed endless, almost overwhelming, especially with only $517 in their Tea Party bank account. There were rallies against illegal immigration to attend. There was a coming lecture about the hoax of global warming. There were shooting classes to schedule, and tips to share about the right survival food.
The group struggled fitfully for direction. Maybe they should start vetting candidates. Someone mentioned boycotting ABC, CBS, NBC and MSNBC. Maybe they should do more recruiting.
?How do you keep on fighting?? Mrs. Stout asked in exasperation.
Lenore Generaux, a local wildlife artist, had an idea: They should raise money for Freedom Force, a group that says it wants to ?reclaim America via the Patriot movement.? The group is trying to unite the Tea Parties and other groups to form a powerful ?Patriot lobby.? One goal is to build a ?Patriot war chest? big enough to take control of the Republican Party.
Not long ago, Mrs. Stout sent an e-mail message to her members under the subject line: ?Revolution.? It linked to an article by Greg Evensen, a leader in the militia movement, titled ?The Anatomy of an American Revolution,? that listed ?grievances? he said ?would justify a declaration of war against any criminal enterprise including that which is killing our nation from Washington, D.C.?
Mrs. Stout said she has begun to contemplate the possibility of ?another civil war.? It is her deepest fear, she said. Yet she believes the stakes are that high. Basic freedoms are threatened, she said. Economic collapse, food shortages and civil unrest all seem imminent.
?I don?t see us being the ones to start it, but I would give up my life for my country,? Mrs. Stout said.
She paused, considering her next words.
?Peaceful means,? she continued, ?are the best way of going about it. But sometimes you are not given a choice.?


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/16/us/politics/16teaparty.html?fta=y&pagewanted=all
 
Top